Israeli soldiers check a Palestinian woman at a checkpoint at the entrance to the village of Beit Omar near the West Bank city of Hebron yesterday.

The international community has repeatedly called for moves to reduce tensions but Netanyahu has vowed to step up punitive measures

AFP
Jerusalem



Two Palestinian teenagers were shot dead by Israeli soldiers in separate incidents in the West Bank yesterday.
The incidents came a day after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas shared a rare handshake at a global climate conference in Paris, but no substantial talks were reported.
Yesterday’s first incident occurred near the Gush Etzion bloc of settlements south of Jerusalem, the site of a series of recent attacks.
A Palestinian brandishing a knife attempted to stab a pedestrian at a junction near the settlement block and was shot dead by an Israeli soldier, police and the army said.
The Palestinian health ministry identified the dead Palestinian as 16-year-old Mamoon Raed Mohamed al-Khateeb.
Later in the day, in the northern West Bank, a young Palestinian woman who sought to stab a soldier near the Israeli settlement of Einav was shot and killed by the serviceman, the army said.
Palestinian police sources identified her as 19-year-old Maram Hassouna, a university student in Nablus who had previously served two years in prison for another attempted knife attack.
Violence since October 1 has left 103 dead on the Palestinian side, including an Arab Israeli, as well as 17 Israelis, an American and an Eritrean.  
The stabbings, shootings and car rammings have mainly been carried out by “lone wolf” attackers who have defied calls for peaceful resistance to Israel’s occupation.
Many of them have been young people, including teenagers, reflecting anger and lost hope over Israel’s occupation, the Palestinians’ fractured leadership and the complete lack of progress in peace efforts, analysts say.
The international community has repeatedly called for moves to reduce tensions but Netanyahu has vowed to step up punitive measures and has accused Palestinian leaders of inciting violence.
The Palestine Liberation Organisation’s secretary general, Saeb Erakat, has said that it could soon move forward on changing long-standing links with Israel, including security co-ordination, if Netanyahu’s government does not take steps toward peace.
There has been speculation that such moves could lead to the collapse of the Palestinian Authority, the governing administration set up in the 1990s under the landmark Oslo accords.
During a visit to Paris on Monday for a global climate summit, Netanyahu told Israeli reporters that he did not want to see the collapse of the Palestinian Authority as it could further empower Palestinian hardliners, such as Hamas.
The Palestinian Authority is dominated by Abbas’s Fatah party.
“The fact that there’s now a bad alternative (the PA) doesn’t mean that we won’t get a worse alternative,” Israeli daily Haaretz quoted Netanyahu as saying.
“But there has to be a change in the PA leadership’s behaviour.”
Netanyahu and Abbas shook hands at the summit in Paris, but no substantial talks were reported and both sides played down the importance of the brief encounter.
US Secretary of State John Kerry last week held separate talks with Netanyahu and Abbas, but left without achieving a breakthrough.
After returning to the United States, Kerry said the conflict was at a “pivotal point” and expressed concern over “the potential for the situation to spin out of control”.
Yesterday’s violence also came a day after a Jerusalem court found two Israelis guilty of the burning alive of a Palestinian teen in the run-up to last year’s Gaza war, but held off on convicting the alleged ringleader.


 

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